Conformational Changes of the Two Different Conformers of Grifolan in Sodium Hydroxide, Urea or Dimethylsulfoxide Solution
Ohno, N (a), Adachi, Y(a), Ohsawa, M (b), Sato, K (b),Oikawa, S (b), Yadomae, T (b)
a) Tokyo College of Pharmacy, b) Nippon Beet Sugar Mfg. Co. Ltd.
Grifolan is an antitumor (1–>3)-β-D-glucan with a β-glucosyl substitution at C-6 of every three main chain units, and is produced by Grifola frondosa ( maitake ). Grifolan possesses two different solid-state conformations, N (native) and H (helix) (N. Ohno et al., Chem. Pharm. Bull. 34, 2555 (198 6)), and both form a gel in an aqueous neutral media. In this study, the gel-to-sol or sol-to-gel transition of these forms in sodium hydroxide, urea and dimethylsulfoxide solutions were examined by carbon-13 nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. The N gel showed C13 signals in sodium- hydroxide of more than 0.15N, and the H gel showed them at more than 0.05N. Gel-to-sol transitions of the N and H gels in urea were induced at 8 and 2M, respectively. Sol-to-gel transitions of the glucans in dimethylsulfoxide were induced by the addition of more than 20% of water. These results suggested firstly that the architecture of the two gels is different because the gel-to-sol transition occurred more easily in the case of the H gel than the N gel, and secondly that the structure of the two glucans in the sol state is essentially the same.